Population dynamics and management of free-roaming cats

With an estimated 400 million domestic cats worldwide, free-roaming cats issues are of global importance due to animal welfare and public health concerns, as well as impacts on native wildlife through predation, competition and disease transmission. Though these impacts have been well documented, no...

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Main Author: Hill, Paige McGee
Other Authors: Lopez, Roel R
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3842
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-38422013-01-08T10:38:17ZPopulation dynamics and management of free-roaming catsHill, Paige McGeefree-roaming catsmanagementWith an estimated 400 million domestic cats worldwide, free-roaming cats issues are of global importance due to animal welfare and public health concerns, as well as impacts on native wildlife through predation, competition and disease transmission. Though these impacts have been well documented, no research has evaluated the ecology and population dynamics of unmanaged, free-roaming cat populations using radio-telemetry. My objectives were to (1) compare population demographics (survival, fecundity and annual ranges/movements) among sex and ownership classifications (feral, semi-feral, and owned), (2) evaluate mark-resight and distance sampling for estimating cat abundances in urban areas, and (3) evaluate the effectiveness and costs associated with euthanasia and trap/treat/neuter/release (TTNR) programs for controlling urban cat populations. I radio-collared free-roaming cats (feral, n = 30; semi-feral, n = 14; owned, n = 10) in Caldwell, Texas (October 2004-2005). I found (1) increased levels of ownership or feeding reduce free-roaming cats’ ranges and movements while increasing survival and fecundity, (2) distance sampling resulted in precise abundance estimates providing an alternative to estimating urban cat densities, and (3) both euthanasia and TTNR may effectively reduce free-roaming cat numbers if implemented at high rates (>50% of population treated) the first year. I recommend euthanasia be implemented in ecologically sensitive areas and TTNR in areas lacking public support for lethal control. Population control solutions should include public education to increase awareness of cat issues and impacts, and pre- and post-implementation monitoring plans.Texas A&M UniversityLopez, Roel R,2006-08-16T19:05:57Z2006-08-16T19:05:57Z0001-052006-08-16T19:05:57ZBookThesisElectronic Thesistext355821 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3842en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic free-roaming cats
management
spellingShingle free-roaming cats
management
Hill, Paige McGee
Population dynamics and management of free-roaming cats
description With an estimated 400 million domestic cats worldwide, free-roaming cats issues are of global importance due to animal welfare and public health concerns, as well as impacts on native wildlife through predation, competition and disease transmission. Though these impacts have been well documented, no research has evaluated the ecology and population dynamics of unmanaged, free-roaming cat populations using radio-telemetry. My objectives were to (1) compare population demographics (survival, fecundity and annual ranges/movements) among sex and ownership classifications (feral, semi-feral, and owned), (2) evaluate mark-resight and distance sampling for estimating cat abundances in urban areas, and (3) evaluate the effectiveness and costs associated with euthanasia and trap/treat/neuter/release (TTNR) programs for controlling urban cat populations. I radio-collared free-roaming cats (feral, n = 30; semi-feral, n = 14; owned, n = 10) in Caldwell, Texas (October 2004-2005). I found (1) increased levels of ownership or feeding reduce free-roaming cats’ ranges and movements while increasing survival and fecundity, (2) distance sampling resulted in precise abundance estimates providing an alternative to estimating urban cat densities, and (3) both euthanasia and TTNR may effectively reduce free-roaming cat numbers if implemented at high rates (>50% of population treated) the first year. I recommend euthanasia be implemented in ecologically sensitive areas and TTNR in areas lacking public support for lethal control. Population control solutions should include public education to increase awareness of cat issues and impacts, and pre- and post-implementation monitoring plans.
author2 Lopez, Roel R,
author_facet Lopez, Roel R,
Hill, Paige McGee
author Hill, Paige McGee
author_sort Hill, Paige McGee
title Population dynamics and management of free-roaming cats
title_short Population dynamics and management of free-roaming cats
title_full Population dynamics and management of free-roaming cats
title_fullStr Population dynamics and management of free-roaming cats
title_full_unstemmed Population dynamics and management of free-roaming cats
title_sort population dynamics and management of free-roaming cats
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3842
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